Caitlin Clark update

- Caitlin Clark said she feels good in Indiana Fever training camp after an injury‑marred 2025 season. (usmagazine.com) - Clark is explicitly learning to manage her reps in practice to protect her workload for 2026. (hawkeyeswire.usatoday.com) - The Fever’s roster context includes Aliyah Boston remaining a cornerstone next to Clark, affecting minutes and roles. (themirror.com) (hawkeyeswire.usatoday.com)

Caitlin Clark opened Indiana Fever training camp this week saying she is fully healthy after a 2025 season cut to 13 games by multiple injuries. (usmagazine.com) Clark told reporters she feels “100% healthy” entering camp after dealing with quad, groin and ankle issues last season. USA Today reported she played only 13 games in 2025 before returning to full work this spring. (usmagazine.com) (usatoday.com) She is also changing how she practices. Hawkeyes Wire reported on April 21 that Clark said she is learning to manage her reps in camp instead of trying to take every possession at full volume. (hawkeyeswire.usatoday.com) That adjustment follows a year when Indiana had to navigate long stretches without its lead guard. The Fever opened 2026 camp on April 19 with Clark back on the floor and expectations higher after last season’s deep playoff push. (usatoday.com) (wthr.com) Indiana’s roster still runs through the Clark-Aliyah Boston partnership. The Fever’s official 2026 roster lists Boston and Clark as returning core pieces, with Kelsey Mitchell, Lexie Hull and Sophie Cunningham also in camp. (fever.wnba.com) (indystar.com) Boston’s presence shapes the basketball side of Clark’s return. Boston averaged 15.0 points, 8.2 rebounds and 3.7 assists on the Fever roster page, numbers that keep Indiana built around an inside-out pairing rather than asking Clark to carry every action alone. (fever.wnba.com) The camp roster also shows how much competition surrounds that core. Indiana brought 16 players into training camp, including rookie guard Raven Johnson and rookie forward-center Makayla Timpson, for a team that must trim to a regular-season roster. (indystar.com) (fever.wnba.com) For Clark, the immediate update is simpler than the bigger expectations around Indiana: she is back, practicing without restrictions, and trying to stay that way through the 2026 season. (usmagazine.com) (hawkeyeswire.usatoday.com)

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